Winter

dryoats

Info


Created
2 years, 11 months ago
Creator
dryoats
Favorites
0

Profile


11955032?1626635621

"Winter"


pronouns
they/them

age
unknown

subject number
#190

birthdate
unknown

status
alive

Appearance


Subject takes on the appearance of a small plushie with the characteristics of a wolf. Plushie is a worn blue pattern with some different fabric stitched in as replacements in some areas. Grey button eyes, one often coming unstitched and hanging slightly. Head appears unattached to the rest of the body, floating just above the neck line. Subject is always tearing and stuffing is spilling out.

size
small

species
stuffed animal

eye color
grey

fur color
blue

Background


Found stray dog picked up near Lab 9 during a snowstorm. It appears to be friendly.

Experiment


Location: Lab 9 - "Restoration Facility"

Goal - Can a living soul be put into an inanimate object? Is reanimation possible?

Method

Use plushie given. Drain blood from subject and soak plushie in it. Proceed to inject plushie with subject's life essence.

Result

After injecting life essence, the plushie was left over night with no significant changes. Dr. [redacted] noted the blood that seeped into plushie stuffing did not stain it red. After a day, subject was observed to twitch and move. It appeared to be conscious, further tests were conducted. After a week, Subject #190 was walking around and actively engaging with scientists. It appeared to keep it's friendly attitude from before. Subject seemed to move fluidly and easily despite no kind of structural support (i.e. bones, rips, nerves, etc.). Scientists began noticing that the plushie was in constant need to repair due to the strain put on the seams by the subject. Body was not made to move, hence the ripping. Scientists also noted that the subject did not appear to feel pain, perhaps due to the lack of nerves and receptors. Subject is half blind due to one of the plushie's button eyes falling off prior to injection. Despite having several limbs or extremities detached/torn off, it does not appear to bother the subject. Unattached limbs do not move and appear to be in a state prior to injection. Once reattached, limbs regain movement and proceed to function as normal.

Status

Success. Further testing approved.

Note: Constant monitoring not needed. Regular check-ins required, as well as maintenance for torn and ripped seams.

Authorized Personnel


Dr. Rieker


Head Scientist.

Derwin


Assistant.

[redacted]


Advisor.